Every so often, an operator makes some version of the same case: cut out the aggregator, sell virtual offices directly, keep the full margin. It comes from a small handful of people, usually ones who tried it and declared success.
The argument isn’t wrong. It’s just incomplete. This post runs the full math, including the parts that tend to get left out.
The anti-aggregator pitch sounds compelling: stop paying commissions, sell virtual offices directly, keep the full margin. It comes from credible-sounding sources, software vendors, coworking consultants, and operators who tried it and declared success.
But the pitch has a flaw that rarely gets addressed. It compares aggregator costs against zero. It treats going direct as if direct is free. It's not. This post breaks down what going direct actually costs a center, organized by category, so you can make the decision with accurate numbers on both sides.
The strongest version of the case goes like this: if you charge $65 per month for a virtual office address and an aggregator takes 50%, you net $39. Sell the same product directly at $65 and you keep the full amount. Over 50 clients, that's $1,300 per month in recovered margin.
Stated that way, it sounds straightforward. And the math is accurate, as far as it goes. The question is what it costs to generate and support those 50 direct clients, and whether that number is actually lower than $1,300 per month.
When you run the full calculation, the answer is often no.
This is the cost most often glossed over in the anti-aggregator pitch. Virtual office clients search Google, compare options, and evaluate providers across price, location, and brand trust. Aggregators have spent years building search visibility, review profiles, and brand recognition so that when someone searches "virtual office [city]," the aggregator network appears.
When you go direct, you start with your own website and your own search visibility. If that visibility is already strong, you have an advantage. If it's not, the cost to build it is real.
Paid search for virtual office terms is competitive. Depending on your market, campaigns can run $500 to $2,000 per month per location to drive meaningful volume. SEO typically takes 6 to 18 months to generate organic traffic for a new or under-optimized domain.
There's also an element the anti-aggregator pitch rarely mentions: the billboard effect. When your address appears across aggregator search results, prospective clients see it multiple times before deciding. Some convert through the aggregator. Many search your center directly after seeing you in aggregator results. Remove yourself from those networks and direct traffic often declines too, because initial discovery no longer happens.
A center that sells direct virtual offices still needs someone to close them: the owner, a community manager, or a dedicated sales resource. Aggregator-sourced clients arrive with the decision mostly made. They've compared options, selected an address, and are ready to start. The center fulfills, not sells.
Direct clients require a sales process: responding to inquiries, handling pricing questions, walking through compliance requirements, managing onboarding, and following up on quiet prospects. At 5 to 10 hours per week across the team, and a modest $25 per hour loaded rate, that's roughly $500 to $1,000 per month in direct sales labor, before management overhead or opportunity cost.
If you receive mail on behalf of clients, you're operating as a Commercial Mail Receiving Agency (CMRA). That comes with legal requirements under USPS regulations. Each virtual office client must complete PS Form 1583, which requires two valid forms of identification and notarization. The completed form must be submitted to the USPS Customer Registration Database.
Managing this manually is time-consuming as your roster grows. Dedicated CMRA compliance software carries a recurring subscription. Manual processing carries staff time and compliance risk. Aggregators who handle compliance absorb this cost. When you go direct, both come back to you.
Aggregator-managed clients bill through the aggregator's infrastructure. Centers receive payment on schedule regardless of whether the underlying client pays. Bad debt stays with the aggregator. Direct clients require your own billing infrastructure: payment processing (typically 2 to 3% per transaction), invoicing management, and a collections process for delinquent accounts.
In a mature direct portfolio, delinquency rates of 3 to 8% are common. On 50 clients at $65, that's 2 to 4 clients per month who haven't paid. Chasing those clients takes time, and some won't pay. The bad debt is yours.
Virtual office clients generate ongoing support needs: mail forwarding questions, address confirmation letters, account changes, and disputes. At low volume, a community manager can absorb these. At scale, they represent a meaningful share of weekly operational time.
Beyond support, there's churn. Direct operators need a process to respond to cancellations, attempt to retain clients, and manage off-boarding. Aggregators who offer client success programs handle a portion of this on the center's behalf. When lifecycle management is yours, so is the churn rate and the cost of replacing lost clients.
NEXT STEPS: Learn about CMRA compliance requirements
Here's what the comparison looks like for a center managing 50 virtual office clients at $65 per month, using the cost ranges above.
| Cost Category | Direct Model | Aggregator Model |
| Demand generation (marketing + paid search) | $500-$1,500/mo | $0 |
| Sales labor (5-10 hrs/week at $25/hr loaded) | $500-$1,000/mo | $0 |
| Compliance processing (software + staff time) | $100-$300/mo | $0 |
| Billing, payment processing, and collections | $150-$250/mo | $0 |
| Support and churn management | $150-$300/mo | $0 |
| Gross revenue (50 clients) | $3,250/mo | $1,625/mo (net after 50% commission) |
| Estimated net margin range | $150-$1,525/mo | $1,625/mo |
The math doesn't always favor going direct.
For centers with strong existing marketing infrastructure and operationally mature teams, direct sales can generate better margins. For most independent centers, particularly those without established digital presence, the aggregator model produces better net economics once the full cost picture is included.
The more accurate framing isn't "aggregators are expensive." It's "which model generates better net revenue for your specific center, given your existing capabilities and cost structure?"
Even for centers that could generate strong direct results, the more important question may be whether virtual office sales is the highest-value use of your team's time.
Community managers running a coworking center handle a lot: member relationships, event programming, facility management, meeting room operations, tour conversions. Adding a full direct sales and lifecycle management function for virtual offices is a real organizational commitment.
Most centers that have tried going direct and returned to an aggregator model describe the same decision: "We could do it, but it was taking attention away from the things that actually differentiate our space."
As an Alliance partner, the costs in each category above are absorbed by the partnership. Here's how each one maps:
Alliance maintains search visibility, review profiles, and a national brand that drives client discovery at scale. Centers don't pay for leads. They receive them.
Clients arrive at your center contracted and ready to start. Your team fulfills, not sells. There's no inquiry management, pricing negotiation, or prospect follow-up required.
Alliance manages PS1583 collection, ID verification, and notarization through the Verified system.
Alliance bills clients directly and pays centers on schedule. Delinquency and bad debt risk stay with Alliance, not with your center.
Alliance manages client success programs designed to reduce churn and extend lifetime value. When a client is at risk of canceling, Alliance works to retain them before the center is affected.
The commission covers all of this. When you evaluate the aggregator model, that's the correct comparison: not commission versus zero, but commission versus the sum of all costs you'd incur going direct.
NEXT STEPS:
Explore how Alliance center partnerships work
Read the CMRA compliance guide for centers
The anti-aggregator argument isn't wrong. It just presents an incomplete version of the math. Going direct can work, particularly for centers with established marketing infrastructure and operationally mature teams willing to take on the full sales and lifecycle function.
But for most independent centers, the full cost of direct virtual office sales is higher than the commission structure they're trying to avoid. Run the real numbers on both sides. Account for demand generation, compliance, billing, support, and the opportunity cost of your team's time. Then decide.
The comparison looks different once all five cost categories are on the table.